Lfi 339 
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Copy 1 



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Proposed Names 



for the 



Public Elementary Schools 



of 



New York City 



All Boroughs 



Eagle Cibrary 



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THE EAGLE LIBRARY. i^° 



o 



Proposed Names 



FOR THE 



Public Elementary Schools 



OF 



New York City 



BY 
EDWARD B. SHALLOW and JOHN H. WALSH 

Associate City Superintendents. 
Subject to revision by the Local School Boards of the City. 




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PIBI.ISHED BV 

THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, BROOKLYN-NEW YORK 

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PROPOSED NAMES for tlie PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS OF N. Y. C. 



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JAN 29 1915 



The Eagle Library 



INTRODUCTION 



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S'VISS" 


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HE Board of Education having resolved that 
the public elementary schools of the City of 
New York should receive names as well as 
numbers, it devolved on someone to take the 
initiative of carrying their will into effect. 
It was referred to the Board of Superintend- 
ents, and City Superintendent William H. 
Maxwell appointed two of his associates, Edward B. Shallow 
and John H. Walsh, two Brooklyn men, to undertake the diffi- 
cult task. They were thoroughly competent, knowing the city 
generally and Brooklyn especially well. The names they have 
recommended are by no means to be taken as the final dis- 
position of the matter. They are more suggestive than per- 
manent — a tentative list, they call it. Changes have already 
been suggested, and when the names are officially adopted by 
the Board of Education they will be such as have been ap- 
proved by the various local school boards, the principals and 
the communities in which the schools are located. 

For several years many educators have been of the opinion 
that the elementary schools should be designated by names 
as well as numbers. The schools of the respective five boroughs 
have been increasing rapidly, until now there are 558 in the 
city. The numbers were unsatisfactory, it was claimed, in 
most instances, especially in the newer schools, and failed to 
have the same influence with the pupils that schools with 
the names of prominent men and women of the past would 
have; that there would be a larger school spirit and a stronger 
loyalty. 

We are told that the New York City Teachers Association 
years ago advocated the substitution of names for numbers, 
but nothing came of it at that time. And it was not until 
the late "'illiani .T. Morrison, at the time president of the 
Brooklyn Teachers Association, brought it before the members 
of his association, was anything really done toward pushing 
the idea to a consummation. From that association it went to 
the Teachers Council, which approved of it, and President 
Thomas W, Churchill of the Board of Education, when it was 
brought to his attention, favored it. It was thereupon referred 
to the Board of Superintendents, and Associate Superintendents 
Shallow and Walsh were appointed a committee, snd they 
brought in a report favorable to the recommendation. The 
Board of Superintendents adopted their report, with a few 
changes, and the Board of Education subsequently adopted it. 
In their recommendation to the Board of Education the 
superintendents advised that ail schools o: the city be 
given' distinctive names, and that the several local school boards 
be requested to state their objections to, or saggesticns for, the 
improvement of the names that would be submitted to them 
by the Beard of Superintendents. 

It was recommended that in the naming of the schools the 
following plan be adopted: 

1. The names of schools in one borough shall not be dupli- 
cated in another borough. 

2. That where the name of a street on which a school is 



located is a suitable and desirable name for the scbool, t1>Rt 
name be proposed for the school. 

3. That the following be suggested as classes of names 
from which the names of schools may be selected: 

(a) Names of illustrious Americans — those of high rank in 
exploration and discovery, statesmanship, science and art, in- 
vention, education and literature. 

(b1 Names of citizens of any land who were distinguished 
for some contribution to the welfare and progress of mankind. 

(ci Names of historic or distinctive localities in the City 
of New York. 

Id I Names of officials and educators of New York City 
or State noteworthy for civic pride and achievement, provided 
they are no longer living. 

(et Names of New York City streets. 

The superintendents say that on July 3. 1851. an act wai 
passed by the Legislature of the State amending and consoli- 
dating the school acts of the city, and providing, among other 
things, for the taking over by the Board of Education of the 
schools then controlled by the Public School Society, and pro- 
viding that they be numbered consecutively. Hence, until 
that act is repealed, the schools will have to be designated by 
numbers as well as by names. It is held by some members of 
the Board of Education that it would be well to continue this 
arrangement, in order to simplify the keeping of the records 
of the schools. 

In their report accompanying the list of names prepared, 
Superintendents Shallow and Walsh say: 

'•There are many reasons why public schools have dis- 
tinctive names, rather than numbers. Among such reasons 
might be mentioned the inspiration which a name illustrious 
in statesmanship, education, letters, science, . rt, exploration 
or invention gives to the young, and the information which 
comes from an acquaintance with the biography of the one 
who bore the name. Names of historic localities in cities niay 
be perpetuated and made more significant by giving them to 
public schools. In the City of New York we have many 
such localities. 

•'As far as possible, names have been selected which indi- 
cate the location of the respective schools. In the greater part 
cf Manhattan Borough, where the streets are numbered «nd 
not named, and also in certain parts of Brooklyn where the 
same condition prevails, it was necessary to give names which 
do not indicate localities. 

"We have tried, as far as possible, to select for the scheels 
names cf persons who contributed to the welfare and progress 
of mankind. It is considered wise to eliminate entirely the 
names of living persons. This conclusion was reached after » 
full consideration of the subject, since a previous recommenda- 
tion was made. In connection with the names proposed for 
each numbered school we have given the address, or the loe«- 
ticn, of the school." 

There has been great rivalry among principals for the names 
o; "Lincoln'' and "Washington." Fifteen principals of school* 
have applied for these names, but it has been definitely ds- 
cided that only one school in the city should be named tftM 
Lincoln, and only one after W»»hingtoa. 



'PROPOSED NAMES for the PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS OF N. Y. C. 



Ili»;{|liil!lll!lllilll!l!illl{||liliillill!!l!liiii!llillllillliliil{l!ll!ll!lli!l] 



Facts About 
Our Schools 



It is interesting to note that out of 
a total registration of 726,744 in 
the elementary, vocational and truant 
schools in New York City, 275,222 
are students in Brooklyn schools. 
The Eagle Almanac for 191 5 contains 
several pages of statistics about our 
schools and several thousand other 
facts. Price, $1.00 per copy, ^ 






IiiHillilllilli!Biiilil!liiiiliiil!i!ll!illi!illiliiiii!liilllil!iia 



Tha Eagte Lthrary 



Proposed Names for the Public Elementary Schools 

of New York City 



PROPOSED NAMES FOR BROOKLYN SCHOOLS 



p. S. 1. The John Q. Adams— Adams 
and Concord streets. 

P. S. 2, The Bergen— Forty-seventh 
■treet, near Third avenue. 

P. S. 3/The John Hancock— Hancock 
■ rreet, near Bedford avenue. 

P. S. 4,*The Georg:e Berkeley— Berke- 
ley place, near Fifth avenue. 

T*. S. 5, McLaughlin Park, or James 
Lawrence — Tillar^, Bridge and Law- 
rence streets. 

P. S. 6, .The Warren— Baltic and War- 
ren streets, near Smith street. 

P. S. 7, The Torktowu— York street, 
near Bridge street. 

P. S. 8, The P.obert Fulton— Hicks, 
Middagh.and Poplar streets. 

v. S. 9, The Prospect Hill— Vander- 
bilt avenue and Sterling place. 

P. S. 10, The John Howard Payne— 
.Seventh . avenue, Seventeenth street 
and Prospect avenue. 

P. S. n— The George Washington- 
Washington avenue, near Greene ave- 
nue. 

P. S. \Z. The Adelphi— Adelphi street, 
near Myrtle avenue. 

P. S. 13, The Calvin Patter.son— De- 
graw street, near Hicks street. 

P. S. -14, The Concord — Navy and 
Concord .streets. 

P. S. 15, The 
avenue, ■■ State 
streets. 

P. S. It), The Leonard Dunkly— Wilson 
street, near Bedford avenue. 

P. S. IT, The Thomas F. Meagher — 
Driggs avenue and North Fifth street. 

P. S. 13. The Edward Bush— Maujer 
street near Leonard street. 

P. S. 19'. The Edward G. Ward— South 
Second street and Keap street. 

P. S. -0, The Union- Keap — Union ave- 
nue and Keap street. 

P. S. 21, The McKibbin— McKibbin 
street, near Manhattan avenue. 

P. S. 22, The Greenpoint — Java street, 
near Manhattan avenue. 

P. S. 2.'), The Alex Humboldt— Skill- 
man avenue and Humboldt street. 

P. S. 24, The Belvidere — Beaver and 
Belvidere streets and Arion place. 

P. S. 2.5, The General Lafayette— La- 
fayette avenue, near Sumner avenue. 

P. S. 2C. The Josiah Qulncy— Qulncy 
■treet, near Ralph avenue. 

P. S. 27, The Thomas Nelson Jr.— 
Nelson and Hicks street*. 



Schermerhorn — Third 
and Schermerhorn 



P. S. 28, The .loseph Redman Drake— 
Herkimer street, near Ralph avenue. j 

P. S. 29, The Columbia— Columbia ! 
and Amity streets. ', 

P. S. SO, The Wolcott— Conover. Sul- i 
livan and Wolcott streets. 

P. S. n. The Samuel F. Dupont— Du- : 
pont street, near Manhattan avenue, i 

P. S. 32, The Hoyt— Hoyt and Presl- i 
dent streets. 

P. S. 33, Thomas Heyward Jr.— Hey- 
ward street, near Broadway. 

P. S. 34, The Oliver H. Perry— Nor- 
man avenue, Kckford and Oakland 
streets. 

P. S. 35, Stephen Decatur— Decatur 
street and Lewis avenue. 

P. S. 36, Grover Cleveland— Stagg 
street, near Bushwick avenue. 

P. S. 37. The Williamsburg— South 
Fourth street, near Berry street. 

P. S. 38, Robert Emmet— North Sev- 
enth street, near Bedford avenue. 

P. S. 39. The Eugene Field— Sixth 
avenue and Eighth street. 

P. S. 40. The Rossini— Fifteenth street 
near Fourth avenue. 

P. S. 41, The Dean— Dean street and 
New York avenue. 

P. S. 42, St. Marie's— St. Mark's and 
Classon avenues. 

P. S. 43, The Walt Whitman— Boerura 
street, near Manhattan avenue. 

P. S. 44, Israel Putnam, Throop and 
Putnam avenues, and Madison street. 

P. S. 4S. Baron DeKalb— Lafayette 
avenue, near Classon avenue. 

P. S. 46. Frances Parkman — Union 
street, near Henry street. 

P. S. 47, F. Marion Crawford— Pacific 
.jnd Dean streets, near Third avenue. 

P. S. 48. The Mapleton— Eighteenth 
avenue and Sixty-seventh street. 

P. S. 49, TJie Graham — Maujer street 
near Graham avenue. 

P. S. iiO. The Sylve-ster Malone— South 
Fourth street, near Havemeyer street. 

P. S. .")1, The Nathaniel Hawthorne — 
Meeker avenue and Humboldt street. 

P. S. 52, William Ellery— Ellery street 
near Broadway. 

P. S. 53, Paolo Toscanelii— Troutman 
street near Central avenue. 

P. S. 54, The Walworth— Walwortb 
street near Myrtle avenue. 

P. S. 55, Frank R. Stockton— Floyd 
and Stockton streets, near Tompkins 
avenue 



P. S. 56, Thomas \V. Field- Bii.«hwicli 
avenue and Madison street. 

P. S. 57, The Whitelaw Reid— P.eld 
avenue and Van Bureu sueet. 

P. S. tiS, The Degraw— Degraw street 
near Smith street. 

P. S. 59. The Horace Cireeley— Leon- 
ard street near Nassau avenue. 

P. S. GO, The Greenwood— Fourth 
avenue and Twentieth street./ 

P. S. 61, The Richard Arkwright— 
Fulton street and New .lersey avenue. 

P. S. 62. The Edward M.^ 'shepard— 
Bradford street near Liberty avenue. 

P. S. 63, The Hinsdale— Hinsdale 
street, near Glenmore avenue. 

P. S. 64. The Belmont— Berriman 
•street. Belmont and Atkins avenues. 

P. S. 65. The Henry W. jlaxwell— 
■Richmond .xtreet. near Ridgewood a\e- 
nue. 

P. S. 66. General Lew Wallace — Os- 
born and Watkiiis streets, near Sutter 
avenue. 

P. S. 67, The Elliott— North Elliott 
place, near Park avenue. 

P. S. 68. The Kosciusko — Bushwick 
avenue and Kosciusko street. ' 

P. S. 69, The Ryersoii, or John Gal- 
lagher— Ryersoti street, near Myrtle 
avenue. 

P. S. 70. Thomas McDonough— Pat- 
Chen avenue, Macon and McDonough 
streets. 

P. S. 71, The Edward Rutledge— Hay- 
ward street, near Lee avenue. 

P. S. 72. The New Lots— New Lots 
Road. Schenck and Livonia avenues. 

P. S. 73. The Ocean Hill, or ATilliaiu 
J. Morrison— MfDougal street and 
Rockawa.v avenue. 

P. S. 74, A. G. Merwiji— Kosciusko 
street, near Broadway. 

P. S. 75. The Evergreen— Evergreen 
avenue, Ralph and Grove streets. 

P. S. 76, The Ditraas Jewell— Wyona 
street, near .latnaica avenue. 

P. S. 77. The William Penn-Second 
street, near Sixth avenue. 

P. S. 78, The Seth Thayer Stewart- 
Pacific street, near Court street. 

P. S. 79, The Evangeline Whitney— 
Kosciusko street, near Sumner avenue. 

P. S. 80, The Sea Gate— West Seven- 
teenth and West Nineteenth streets, 
near Neptune avenue. 

P. S. 81, The UnionviUe— Harway av. 
, enue and Stryker street. _. 



6 



PROPOSED NAMES for the PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS OF N. Y. C. 



p. S. 82, The Harriet B. Stowe— Fourtb 
avenue and Thirty-sixth street. 

K S. 83, The Isaac Newton— Schenec- 
tady avenue, Bergen and Dean stieets. 

P. S. 8-1, The Gleumore— Glenmore 
avenue and Watkins street. 

P. S. 85, Edward Everett Hale— Ever- 
jrreen avenue and Eldert street. 

P. S. 86. The Irving-ton— Irving ave- 
nue and Harman street. 

P. S. 87. The John McNamee— Herki- 
mer street and Radde place. 

P. S. 88. The Vandcrvoort — Vander- 
voort place and Thames street. 

P. S. 89, The Vandervecr Park— Nevr- 
kirk avenue and K.^sl Thirty-first 
street . 

P. S. 00. The Flallir.'ih- Bedford and 
Church avenues. 

P. S. 91, The Orestes A. Brownson 



P. S. 11", The Ten Eyck — Bushwick 

avenue, Stagg and Ten Eyclc streets. 

P. S. lis. The Charles Dudley War- 
ner — Fourth avenue and Fiftj'-Tiinth 
street. 

P. S. IID, The Netherlands — Avenue 
K and East Thirty-eighth street. 

P. S. 120, The Barren Island — Barren 
Island. 

P. S. 121. The Livingston, or Hunter- 
fly — East Fifty-fifth street and Ave- 
nue C 

P. S. 122, The Harrison — Harrison 
avenue, Heyw.ird and Rutledge 
streets. 

P. S. 123. The Suydam— Irving ave- 
nue and Suydatii street. 

P. S. 124, Christopher Cunningham — 
Fourth nvenue and Thirteenth street. 



P. S. 125, Richard II. Dana — Blake. 
East New York avenue and Maple | Rockaway and Thatford avenues. 
,t,.eg(. i P. S. 126, The Meserole — Meserole 

P. S. 92, Henry Darwin Rogers — avenue and Lorimer street. 
Rogers avenue and Robinson street. jj, s. 127, The A'an Brunt — Seventh 

P. S. 93, The Bedford School — New j avenue and Seventy-eighth street. 
York avenue and Herkimer street. | p g ]28. The Bensonhurst — Twenty- 

P. S. 94, Gowanus— Sixth avenue, | ,i,,j,( avenue and Eighty-third street. 
Fiftieth and Fifty-first streets. i>. s. ]20. The General Gates — Qciincy 

P. S. 9S, The Gravesend— Van Sirklen j Ri,-eet, near Stuyvesant avenue, 
street, near Neck Road. j P. S. 120, The Parkside, or The S. .1. 

P. S. 97, Egbert Benson — Ocean ave-TiKlen — Ocean Parkway, Fort Haniil- 



nue and Avenue U. I Ion avenue and East Fifth street. 

P. S. 98. The Kouwenhoven — .\venue p. s. 131, The William J. Gaynor — 
Z and East Twenty-sixth si reel. Fort Haniilton avenue and Forty-third 

P. S. 99. The Midwood — .\venue K, ^ streel. 
between Ninth and Tenth streets. j P. S. 132, The Conselyea— Manhattan 

P. S. 100. Coney Island — West Third | avenue and Conselyea street. 
Street, near Park place. j P. S. 1.33, The William A. Butler — 

P. S. 101, New Utrecht — Eighty-sixth ! Butler street, between Fourth and 

' Fifth avenues. 



P. S. 149. The East New York — Sutter 
avenue, Vermont and Wyona streets. 

P. S. 150, The Christopher — Christo- 
pher avenue and Sackinan street. 

P. S. 151, The Irving Park — Knicker- 
bocker avenue, Halsey and Weirtield 
streets. 

P. S. 152, The Glenwood Road— Ave- 
nue G, East Twenty-third and Twen- 
ty-fotirth streets. 

P. S. 153, The Homecrest — Avenue T, 
East Twelfth street and Homecrest 
avenue. 

P. S. 154, The Windsor Terrace — 
Eleventh streel, Windsor place and 
Sherman street. 

P. S. 155. The General Herkimer — 
Eastern Parkway and Herkiiuer street. 

I'. S. 156. The Brownsville — Sutter 
avenue. Barrett and Grafton streets. 

P. S. 157. The James Kent — Kent 
.avenue and Taa.t'e place. 

P. S. 1,58, The Warwick — Belmont 
avenue and Warwick street. 

P. S. 1.59. The Pitkin — Pitkin avenue 
and Hemlock streel. 

1". S. 160. The Admiral Sampson- 
Fort Hamilton .avenue and Pifty-flrst 
street. 

1 '. S 101. The Raymond — Second ave- 
nue and Fifty-sixth street. 

P. S. 162. The Willoughby — Willough- 
hy .avenue and Suydam street. 

P. S. 163. unnamed by superintend- 
fiUs. "New Utrecht" suggested — Ben- 
, son and Seventeenth avenues. 

P. S. 164. The Rodney — Fourteenth 
I avenue. Forty-second and Forty-third 
] streets. 

P. S. 165, The F. W. Hooper, or the 
Jolin Lott — I..olt and Hopkinson ave- 



P. S. 134. The Pai kville — Eighteenth ' j^ueg and Amboy street 



avenue, near Ocean Parkway 
P. S. 135. The Rugby— Church avenue 

and East Forty-eighth street. 
I>. S. 136, The Dewey, or The Ericsson 



P. S. 107, The Parkway— Schenectady 
avenue. Eastern Parkway and Lincoln 
place. 

P. S. 168, The Bartlett— Throop ave- 



— Fourth avenue and Fortieth street. ' nue, Bartlett and Whipple streets. 



P. S. 137, The Bainbridge — Saratoga 
avenue and Bainbridge street. 

P. S. 138, The Brooklyn Model— Pros- 
pect place, west of Nostrand avenue. 



P. S. 169. The Sunset Park — Seventh 
avenue and Forty -third street. 

P. S. 170, The Lefferts — Sixth and 
.Stewart avenues. Seventy-first and 



etreet. near Eighteenth avenue. 

P. S. 102, Bay Ridge — Seventy-first 
street and Second avenue. 

P. S. 103. Borough Park — Fourteenth 
avenue and Fifty-third street. 

P. S. 104, Fort Hamilton — Ninety- 
second streel and Fifth avenue. 

P. S. 105, Blythebourne— Fort Hamil- 
ton avenue and Fifty-ninth street. 

P. S. 106, Samuel Woodworth — Put- 
nam avenue and Cornelia street. 

P. S. 107, The Theodore D. Woolsey — 
Eighth avenue and Thirteenth street. 

P. S. 108, The Arlington — Linwood 
street and Arlington avenue. 

P. S. 109 B. The Dumont: P. S. 109 G.l P. S. 141. The Lucy Larcom 
The Frances Kemble — Dumont ave- [Leonard. McKibbin and 
nue, Powell and Sackman streets. streets. 

P. S. 110, The Monitor — Monitor, P. S. 142. The Stranahan— Henry and 
street and Driggs avenue. Rapelye streets. 

P. S. Ill, The Algernon Higgins — I P. S. 143. The .John W. Buckley — 
Sterling place and Vanderbilt avenue, i Havemeyer and North Sixth street. 

P. S 112. The Dyker Park — Fifteenth! P. S. 144. The Lincoln Park — Howard | Dumont, Alabama and Williams ave 
avenue and Seventy-first street. avenue. Prospect place and St. Mark's nues 

P. S. 113, The Isaac Chauncey— Ever- j avenue, 
green avenue, Moffat and Chauncey ; P. S. 145. The General Jackson — Cen 
streets. i f^l avenue and Noll street. 

P. S. 114, The Remsen — Remsen ave 



P. S. 139, The Cortelyou — Cnrtclyou : Sex'Pnty-second streets, 
and Rugby roads. i p. s. 171, The Abraham Lincoln — 

P. S. 140, The Winfleld Scott — Six- 1 Ridgewood, Lincoln and Nichols ave- 
tieth street, west of Fourth avenue. | nues. 

P. S. 172, The James Weir — Fourth 
Boorum | avenue. Twenty-ninth and Thirtieth 
streets. 

P. S. 173, The Liberty — Pennsylvania 
avenue, between Liberty and Glenmore 
avenues. 

P. S. 174. The William Williams — 



nue, near Avenue F. 

P. S. 115, The Canarsie — East Ninety- 
second street, between Avenues L and 
M. 

P, S. 116, The Julia Ward Howe — 
Knlckerrbocker avenue, Grove and 
Salph streets. 



P. S. 175. The Hopkinson — Blake and 
Hopkinson avenues and Bristol street. 
P. S. 170. The Alexander Bell — Sixty- 
P. S. 146. The Proctor — Eighteenth i eigth streel, Twelfth and Bay Ridge 
and Nineteenth streets, between .Sixth avenues. 



and Seventh avenues. 

P. S. 147, The Edward Eggleston — 

Bushwick avenue and McKibbin 

street. 

P. S. US, The Hopkins — Ellery and 

i Hopkins streets, near Delmonico place. 



P. S. 177. The Southgate — Avenue P 
and West avenue. 

P. S. 178, The Champion- — Dean 
street, near Saratoga avenue. 

P. S. 179. The Freeman Clarke — • 
.W ?nue C and RksI Second street. 



PROPOSED NAMES for ihe PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS OF N. Y. C. 



PROPOSED NAMES FOR QUEENS SCHOOLS 



p. S. 1. The Hunter's Point— Ninth 
street and Van Alst avenue, Long Is- 
land City. 

P. S. 2, The Sunnyside— Hulst street 
and Nott avenue. Long- Island City. 

P. S. 3. The Forest Hills— Colonial 
avenue and Euclid street. Forest Hills. 
P. S. 4, The Darwin— Prospect street, 
near Beebe avenue, Long: Island City. 
P. S. 5, The Van Dyke— Academy 
street, near Grand avenue. Long- Is- 
land City. 

P. S. 6. The John H. Thiry— Stein- 
way avenue, near .Taniaica avenue. 
Long Island City. 

P. S. 7, The Astoria— Van Alst ave- 
nue, near Flushing avenue. Long Is- 
land City. 

P. S. 8, The .7ohn A. Dix— Steinway 
avenue, near Ditmar.s avenue. Long 
Island City. 

P. S. 9, The Halletts Cove— Munson 
street, near Fultou avenue. Long Is- 
land City. 

P. S. 10. The Phoebe Cary— Flushing 
avenue. Bowery Bay. 

P. S. 11, The Woodside— Woodside 
avenue, Woodside. 

P. S. 12, The .lames B. Colgate- 
Prospect street. Winfield. 

P. S. 13, The Newtown — Irving place, 
Elmhurst. 

P. S. 14, The Fairview — Fairview and 
Hillside avenues, Corona Heights. 

P. .S. 1.1, The Louona — Junction ave- 
nue. Corona. 

P. S. 16. The Coron.a — Sycamore ave- 
nue. Corona. 

P. S. 17, The Martense — Myrtle ave- 
nue. Corona. 

P. S. 18. Francis .\. AV'alker— Corona 
avenue Corona. 

P. S. 19, The Lake— Evergreen ave- 
nue. Corona. 

P. S. 20, The Sanford— Santord ave- 
nue and I'nion street. Flushing. 

P. S. 21. Bov.'n — Washington and 
Union streets. Flushing. 

P. S. 22, The Henry D. Thoreau— 
Sandford avenue and Murray street, 
Flushing. 

P. S. 23. The Morris K. Jesup— 
Whitestone avenvie and .State street, 
Flushing. 

P. S. No. 24. The Lucius H. Robinson- 
Queens and Robinson avenues. Flush- 

ing. ifitni 

p. S. 23, The General Robertson- 
Jamaica avenue. Head of Vleigh, 
Flushing. 

P. S. 27, The College Point— Thir- 
teenth street and First avenue. College 
Point. 

P. S. 28, The Tallman— Sixth street 
and First avenue. College Point. 

P. S. 29, The Poppenhusen — Sixteenth 
street and Sixth avenue. College Point. 

P. S. 30. The Fletcher — Eleventh ave- 
nue and Nineteenth street, Whitestone. 

P. S. 31, The Bayside— Bell avenue, 
Bayslde. 

P. S. 32. The Lakeville Road. Little 
Neck. 

P. S. 33, The Creedmoor— Madison 
avenue and Cedar street, Creedmoor. 



P. S. 34. The John Harvard— Spring- 
field road and Hollis avenue. 

P. S. 35. The Hollis, or The Wood- 
hull — Palatina and Prospect avenues, 
Hollis. 

P. S. 3i>, The St. Albans— Kverett 
street and Central avenue. St. Albans. 

P. S. 37, The Springfield— Higbie 
avenue and Springfield road, Spring- 
field. 

P. S. 3S, The Rosedale— Foster's 
Meadow road, Rosedale. 

P. S. 39, The Far Rockaway— State 
street and Roanoke avenue. Far Rook- 
away. 

40, The .Samuel Huntington— 
and Union Hall streets, Ja- 



1'. S, 
Pacific 
maica. 

P. S. 



41, The Crocheron — Crocheron 
and Franklin avenues, Bayside. 

P. S. 42, The R. Vernarn— Boulevard 
and Veriiam avenue, Arverne. 

P. S. 43, The Rockaway Park— Wash- 
ington avenue, Rockaway Park. 

P. S. 44, The P. Sarsfield Gilmore— 
Boulevard and Academy avenue, Rock- 
away Beach. 

P. S. 45, The Baisley Park— Three- 
mile Mill Road, Jamaica South. 

P. S. 46, The Daniel Boone— Old South 
Road, Aqueduct. 

P. S. 48, The William Wordsworth- 
South and Church streets, Jamaica. 

P. S. 49— The Brenton— Brenton ave- 
nue, .Tamaica. 

P. S. .'jO, The Dunton— Wyckoff street, 
TaiCourd Lawn, Jamaica. 

P. S. 51, The Arthur Middleton— John- 
son avenue, Richmond Hill. 

P. S. 53, The Charles Carroll— Elm 
street, near Atlantic avenue, Richmond 
Hill. 

P. S. 54, The rieneral William T. Sher- 
man — Hillside avenue and Sherman 
street, Richmond Hill. 

P. S. 55, The John Morton — Maure 
avenue and Beaufort street, Richmond 
Hill. 

P. S. 56, The Jacob A. Riis— Orchard 
avenue and Elm street, Richmond Hill. 
P. S. 57, The Morris Park— Curtis 
avenue, near Broadway, Morris Park. 

P. S. 58, The Woodhaven — Walker 
and Orafton avenues, Woodhaven. 

P. S. 59. The University Place— Uni- 
versity place and Rockaway Road, 
Woodhaven. 

P. S. 60, The Snedeker— Second street, 
near Shaw avenue, Woodhaven. 

P. S. 61, The St. Elmo— Elm street, 
near Union place, Brooklyn Hills. 

P. S. 62, The Chester Park— Washing- 
ton avenue, near Broadway, Chester 
Park, Woodhaven. 

P. S. 63, The Old South— Old South 
Road, near Woodhaven Road, Wood- 
haven. 

P. S. 64, The Andre Ampero— Broad- 
way, near Spruce street, M'oodhaven. 
P. S. 65, The Pascal — Snedeker avenue 
and Second street. South Woodhaven. 
P. S. 66, The Oxford— Union place and 
Tulip street, Brooklyn Hills. 

P. S. 67, The Glendale— Central avenue 
and Olmstead place, Glendale. 



P. S. 6S. The Cambridge— Bergen and 
Rathjen .Tvenues, Evergreen, 

P. S. 71. The Alonzo Cornell— Forest 
avenue. East Williamsburg. 

P. S. 72. The Alex. H. Stevens— Mas- 
peth avenue, Maspelh. 

P. S. 73, I'he William Cowper — Lexing- 
ton avenue, Maspeth 

P. S. 74, The Linden Hill— Woodward 
avenue and Starr street. Metropolitan. 

P. S. 75, The Max Mueller— Bleecker 
street and Covert avenue, Ridgewood, 

P. S, 76, The Laurel Hill— Montgom- 
ery and Congi-ess avenues, Laurel 
Hill. 

P. S. 77, The Ridgewood— Covert ave- 
nue. Centre and George streets, Ridge- 
wood Park. 

P. S. 78, The J. A. Garfield— Maurice 
and Carroll place, Winfiehl. 
79. The Whitestone— Seventh 
and Fourteenth street. White- 



avenue 

P. .S. 

avenue 

stone. 

P. S. 



0, The Blissville— Greenpoint 
avenue, near Bradley avenue. Long Is- 
land City. 

P. S. 81, The Jean Paul Richter^Cy- 
press avenue, Ralph and Bleecker 
streets, Evergreen, 

P. S. 82, The Hammond— Dr. William 
A. — Kaplan avenue, Hammond and 
Horton street, Jamaica. 

P. S. 83, The Ravenswood— Vernon 
and Pierce avenue. Long Island Sity. 

P. S. 84, The Steinway— Albert and 
Theodore streets, near Ditmars avenue. 
Long Island City. 

P. S. 85, The Humphiy Davy— De- 
Bevoise avenue, near Woolsey avenue, 
Long Island Cit.v. 

P. .S.I 86, The Fitz-Greene Halleck— 
Old Flushing avenue, near Grarjd 
street, Maspeth. 

P. S. 87, The Middle Village— Wash- 
ington avenue and Pulaski street, Mid- 
dle Village. 

P. S. 88, The Seneca— Elm avenue 
and Fresh Pond road, Ridgewood Hts. 
P. S. 89, The Elmhurst— Orchard ave- 
nue. Fifth and Sixth streets, Elm- 
hurst. 

P. S. 90, The Mann— Washington av- 
enue, near Jamaica avenue, Richmond 
Hill. 

P. S. 91. The Glendale (new)— Myrtla 
and Washington avenues, Glendale. 

P. S. 92, The General O. O. Howard- 
Hayes avenue and Forty-second street. 
North Corona. 

P. S. 93. The Euclid— Forest and Put- 
nam avenues, Ridgewood Heights, 

P. S. 94, The Westmoreland— Old 
House Landing road. Little Neck. 

P. S. 95, The Eastwood— Larremore, 
Harvard and Yale avenues, Jamaica. 
P. S. 96, The Ozanam— Rockaway 
road and Lincoln avenues, South Ozone 
Park. 

P. S. 97, The Forest Park— Yar- 
mouth and Shipley streets, Woodha- 
ven. 

P. S. 98, The Douglaston-Poplar 
street. Prospect avenue and Bentoa 
place, Douglaston. 



PROPOSED NAMES for the PUBLIC ELEM^^TARY SCHOOLS OF N. Y. C. 



PROPOSED NAMES FOR MANHATTAN SCHOOLS 



P- S. 1, ClKitham Square — Heni-y, 
Catharine and Oliver streets, 

P. S. 2, Patrick Henry— 116 Henry 
street. 

P. S. 3, Henry Hudson— Hudson :aid 
Grove street. 

P. S. 4, William Pitt— Pitt, Ridgre and 
FJvington streets. 

P. S. 5, The Edgecombe — Edgecombe 
avenue, and 140th street. 

P. S. 6, The Florence Nightingale— 
Madison avenue and Eighty-fifth 
street. 

P. S. 7, The Lancaster— Chrystie and 
B ester .streets. 

P. S. 8. The King— 29 King street. 

P. S. 9, The West End— Eighty- 
second street and West End avenue. 

P. S. 1(1. The St. Nicholas— St. Nich- 
olas avenue and 117th street. 

P. S. 11, The William T. Harris— 314 
West Seventeenth street. 

P. S. ]2, The Corlear— Madison and 
Jackson streets. 

P. S. 13, The Houston— East Houston 
and Essex streets. 

P. S. 14, The Olney— 225 East Twenty- 
seventh street. 

P. S. 15, The Monroe— Fourth and 
Fifth streets and Avenue D. 

P. S. 16, The Zabriskie— 208 West 
Thirteenth street. 

P. S. 17, The La Salle— Forty-seventh 
street, west of Eighth avenue. 

P. S. 18, The Generjal Knox- 121 East 
Fifty-first. 

P. S. 1!», The William C. Hess— 344 
East Fourteenth street. 

P. S. 20, The Forsyth— Forsyth Riv- 
Ington and Eldridge streets. 

P. S. 21, The John Doty— Mott and 
Spring streets. 

P. S. 22, The Stanton— Stanton and 
Sheriff streets. , 

P. S. 23, The Nicholas Bayard— Mul- 
berry and Bayard streets. 

P. S. 24, The Mount Morris— 12Sth 
street and Madison avenue. 

P. S. 25. The Schiller— Fourth and 
Fifth streets and First avenue. 

P. S. 26, The Carlisle— 124 West Thir- 
tieth street. 

P. S. 27, The Murray Hill— Forty- 
second street, east of Third avenue. 

P. S. 28, The General .Tohn Newton— 
257 West Fortieth street. 

P. S. 29, Adam Roelandsen— Wash- 
ington and Carlisle streets. 

P. S. 30, The YorkviUe— 230 East 
Eiglity-eighth street. 

P. S. 31, The P. F. McGowan— Mon- 
roe and Gouvernevir streets. 

P. S. 32. The William Wood— 357 
■West Thirty-fifth street. 

P. S. 33, The Chelsea— 418 West 
Twenty-eighth street. 

P. S. 34, The Joseph Pulitzer— 
Broome and Sheriff streets. 

P. S. 35, The Wendell Phillips— 160 
Chrystie street. 

P. S. 36, Tompkins Square— 710 East 
Ninth street. 

P. S. 37, Commodore Barry- 113 East 
Eighty-seventh street. 

P. S. 38, Alessandro Volta— Dorainiclc, 
Clarke and Broome streets. 



P. S. 39. The Hsrlem— 12,ith and 126lh 
streets, west of Second avenue. 

P. S. 40, The William Cullen Bryant 
— 320 East Twentieth street. 

P. S. 41, The Greenwich- 36 Green- 
wich avenue. 

J. S. 42, The Van Gelder— Hester, Or- 
chard and L\icllow streets. 

P. S. 43. The Manhattanville— 129th 
street and Amsterdam avenue. 

P. S. 44, St. John's Park— Hubert and 
Collister streets. 

P. S. 45, The Emma Willard— 223 
We.sl Twenty-lou.-th street. 

P. S. 46, The .\udubon— St. Nicholas 
avenue and 156th street. 

P. S. 47, The Gallaudet— 225 Ea.st 
Twenty-third street. 

P. S. 48. .K. S. Hewitt, 124 West 
Twenty-eighth street. 

P. S. 49, The Kips Bay— Thirty-sev- 
enth and Thirty-eighth streets, west of 
Second avenue. 

P. S. 50, The Grameroy Park- 211 
East Twentieth street. 

P. S. 51. The Elias Howe— 519 West 
Forty-fourth street. 

P. S. 52, The luwood— Broadway and 
.Academy street. 

P. S. 53, The Salome Purroy— 
Seventy-ninth and Eightieth streets, 
east of Third avenue. 

P. S. 54, The Charles C. Pinckney— 
104th street and Amsterdam avenue. 

1^. S. 56, The Gansevoort— 351 West 
Eighteenth street. 

P. S. 57, The Bancroft— 176 East 115th 
street. 

P. S. 58. The William L. Marcy -31 
West Fifty-second street. 

P. S. 59. The Peabody— 228 East Fifty 
seventh street. 

P. S. 60, The Aguilar-197 East Broad- 
way. 

P. S. 61, The R. W. Emerson— T well tl 
street, east of Avenue P.. 

P. S. 62, The W. H. Seward— Hester 
Essex and Norfolk streets. 

P. S, 63. The William McKinley 
Third and Fourth streets, east of First 
avenue. 

P. S. 64. The Henry O'Neill— Ninth 
and Tenth streets, east of Avenue B 

P. S. 65, The Sumner— Eldridge. Koi ■ 
syth and Hester streets. 

P. S. 66. The Chester A. Arthur— 
Eighty-eighth street, east of First ave- 
nue. 

P. S. 67, The Astor— 120 West Forty- 
sixth street. 

P. S. 68, The W. R. Cirace— 116 West 
lL8th street. 

P. S. 69, The James Watt— 125 West 
Fifty-fourth street. 

P. S. 70, The Huxley— Seventy-fifth 
street, east of Third avenue. 

P. S. 71, Van Rensselaer— 188 Seventh 
street. 

P. S. 72. The S. F. B. Morse— Lexing- 
ton avenue and 105th street. 

P. S. 73, The John Winthrop— 209 
East Forty-sixth street. 

P. S. 74, The William Blackstone— 
220 East Sixty-third street. 

P. S. 75. The Norfolk— 25 Norfolk 
Street. 

P. S. 76. The Lexington— L^'x-i'iglo" 
av?iu° r>n.| ,sixt\ ?ig-hth street. 



P S. 77, The Carl Schurz— Eighty- 
sixth street and First avenue. 

P. S. 7S, The Henry Clay— 38 First 
street. 

P. S. 81, Manhattan Model School— 
U9th street and Seventh avenue. 

P. S. 82, The .\gassiz — First avenue 
and .Seventieth street. 

P. S. S3. The Galvani— 110th street, 
east of Third avenue. 

P. S. 84, The Millet— 430 West Fiftieth 
street. 

P. S. 85, The Henry Lee— First ave- 
nue and 117th street. 

P. S. 86. The Nathan Hale— Lexing- 
ton avenue and Ninety-sixth street. 

P. S. 87, The Kiddle— -Amsterdam 
avenue and Seventy-seventh street. 

P. S. 88. The Rivington— Rivington 
and liewis streets. 

P. .S. 89, The Lenox— Lenox avenue 
and 134th street. 

P. S. 90, The Riverside— 147th street, 
west of Seventh avenue. 

P. S. 91, The Wheelock— Stanton and 
Forsyth streets. 

P. S. 92. The Alex H. Green— Broome 
and Ridge streets. 

P. S. 93. The U. g. Grant— .\mster- 
day avenue and Ninety-third street. 

P. S. 94, The Susan B. Green— Am- 
sterdam avenue and Sixty-eighth 
street. 

P. S. 95, The Clarkson— Clarkson and 
West Houston streets. 

P. S. 96, The Franklin— Eighty-first 
treet and Avenue A. 

r. S. 97, The O. W. Holmes— Magin 

ltd Stanton streets. 

I'. S. 98, The Samuel L. Clemens— 3S 

lieriff street. 

P, S, 100. Cyrus McCormiclc— 138th 

treet and Fifth avenue, 

P. S, 101. The Andrew S. Draper— 
ilth street, west of Lexington avenue. 

r. S._ 102. The Cartier— 113th street, 
>ast of. Second avenue. 

P. S. 103. The Elbridge Gerry— 119th 

treet and Madison avenue. 

P. S. 104, The Silas Wright^Sixteenth 
md Seventeenth streets, east of First 
ivenue. 

P. S. 105. The General George G. 
blende— 269 East Fourth street. 

P. S. 106. The Marion— Lafayette 
;treet, near Spring street (formerly on 
■Vlarion street). 

P. S. 107, The Paul Jones— 272 West 
Tenth street. 

P. S. 108, The James K. Polk— 60 Mott 
=;treet. 

P. S. lo:t, The Century— 100th street. 
'oetween Second and Third avenues. 

P. S., 110, The William Harvey^ 
Broome and Cannon streets. 

P. S. 112, The Roosevelt— 83 Roose- 
velt street. 

P. S. 114, The Cherry Hill— Oak, Oli- 
ver and James streets. 

P. S. 115, Fort Hamilton— St. Nicho- 
las avenue and 177th street. 

P. S. 116, The H. M. Stanley— Fifty- 
third street, west of Second avenue. 

P. S. 117, The Dante— 170 East Sav- 
enty-seventh street. 

P. S. 119, The J. R. Lowell, 133d and 
; ' ■. . - ■■... ^f FiKhMi a^enu•. 



u 



PROPOSED NAMES for the PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS OF N. Y. C. 



p. S. 120, The General George B, Mc- 
Clellan— 187 Broome street. 

P. S. 121, The Galileo— 227 East 102(1 
street. ' 

P. S. 122, The Peter Cooper— Xintb 
street and First avenue. 

P. S. 124, Tlie .lohann Kepler— 29 Ho- 
ratio street. 

P. .S. 12«, The Rosa Bonh.eur— C3« East 
'Twelfth street. 

P. S. 127, The Dearborn— 515 West 
'J'hirty-seventh street. 

P. S. 130, The De Soto— 143 Baxter 
street. 

P. S. 131, The Hannibal Hamlin— 272 
East .Sec'ond street. 

P. S. 132, The Wadsworth— lS;;d street 
and Wadsworth avenue. 

P. S.134. Peter Minuit— 68 Pearl street 

P. S. 135, t'.eorge Stephenson — First 
avenue and Fifty-flrst street. 

P. S. 137. The Cyrus W. Field— Grand 
and Essex streets. 

P. S. 14U, The Henry George— IIG Nor- 
tulk street. 

P. S. 141, The Columbus— 402 West 
Fifty-eighth street. 



P. S. 144, The Ethan Allen— Alle.i and 
Hester streets. 

P. S. 147, The Gouvernaur— Gouver- 
neur and Henry streets. 

P. S. 150, The Martha Washington— 
Eighty-sixth street and First avenue. 

P. S. 151, The Miles O'Brien— First 
avenue and Ninety-first street. 

P. S. 157, The Nikola Tesla— St. Nich- 
olas avenue and 12()th street. 

P. £f. 158, The Bayard Taylor— Ave- 
nue A, Seventy-seventh and Seventy- 
eighth streets. 

P. S. No. 159, The Colonel Ellsworth— 
119th street, west ot Second avenue. 

P. S. I(j0, The James E. Sullivan— 
Rivington and SulTolk streets. 

P. S. 161, The Delancey — Ludlow and 
Delancey streets. 

P. S. 162, Annex to P. S. 23. 

P. S. 165. The Madison— 108th street, 
west ot Amsterdam avenue. 

P. S. 168, The General Montgomery — 
104th and 105th streets, east of Second 
avenue. 

P. S. 169, Colonial Park— Audubon 
avenue and IGSth street. 



P. 8. 17U. The \V. H. I'rescott— tilth 
; and 112th streets, east (j[ l.enox ave- 
j nue. 

I P. S. 171, The Mowland— 104th street, 
j east of Fifth avenue. 
I P. S. 172, 'I'he James Otis— lOSth 
street, east of Second avenue. 

P. S. 174, The Thomas Moore— Attor- 
ney streot, near Riving'ton street. 

P. ^. 177, The Roger Bacon— M;ir)<et 
and iVIonroe streets. 

P. S. 17!), The- Daniel Webster— in! st 
street, east of Amsterdam avenue. 

P. S. 183, The R. L. Steven.son— Sixty- 
sixth street, east of First avenue. 

P. S. 184, The, Fennimore Cooper— 
116th street, east of Lenox avenue. 

P. S. i86. The Alex Hamilton— 145th 
street, west oC Amsterdam avenue, 
near Hamilton place. 

P. S. 18S, The il,ewis— Mauliattaa 
East Houston and Lewis streets. 

P. S. 190, The P.aul Revere— Eighty- 
second street, east of Second avenue. 

P. S. 192. The itundolph- Guggcn- 
heimer — Anisterdam avenue and VMlh 
street. 



PROPOSED NAMES FOR THE BRONX SCHOOLS 



p. S. 1. 'I'lie S. S. Randall— 145th street) 
and College avenue. 

P. S. 2, The J. J. Little— Third ave- 
nue, near 169th street. 

P. S. 3, The Courtlandt— 157th street, 
east of Courtlandt avenue. 

P. S. 4, The Crotona— Third and Ful- 
ton avenues and 173d street. 

P. S. 5, The Fordham— Webster ave- 
nue and 189th street. 

P. S. 6, West Farms— Tremonf, Bry- 
ant and Vyse avenues. 

P. S. 7. The Kingsbridge— Kings- 
bridge avenue and 232d street. 

P. S. 8, The Bedford Park— Bedford 
Park. 

P. S. 9, The Morrisania— 138th street, 
west of Brook avenue. 

P. S. 10, The Oliver Goldsmith— Eagle 
avenue and 163d street. 

P. S. 11, The Ogden— 169th street and 
Ogden avenue. 

P. S. >2, The Westchester— In West- 
chester. 

P. S. 13, The Williamsbridge— 216th 
street and Willett avenue. 

P. S. 14. The Throgg's Neck— Eastern 
Boulevard, Throgg's Neck. 

P. S. 16. The General Sheridan— 240th 
street and Carpenter avenue. 

P. S. 17, City Island— Fordham ave- 
nue, City Island. 

p, S. 18, The Frances W. Parker— 
Courtlandt avenue and llSth street. 



P. S. 19, The Woodlawn— 234th street, 
t:ear Kepler avenue, Woodlawn. 

P. S. 20, Charles James Fox— Fox, 
Simpson and 167th streets. 

P. S. 21. The Hewes— 225th street, 
near White Plains avenue. 

P. S. 23, The Union-Tinton— 165th 
street, Tinton and Union avenues. 

P. S. 25, Phil Kearny— 149th street, 
Union and Tinton avenues. 

P. S. 26, General A. E. Burnside— 
Andrews and Burnside avenues, Mor- 
ris Heights. 

P. S. 27, St. Mary's Park— St. Ann's, 
avenue and 148th street. 

P. S. 28, Claremont Park— Treraor.t 
and Anthony avenues. 

P. S. 29, Edmund Burke— 135th street 
and Cypress avenue. 

P. S. 30. The Walton— 141st street and 
Brook avenue. 

P. S. 31, William Lloyd Garrison- 
Walton and Mott avenues and 144lh 
street. 

P. S. 32, The Beaumont— 183d street, 
Beaumont and Cambrelleng avenues. 

P. S. 33, Timothy Dwight— 184th street 
and Walton avenue. 

P. S. 34, Martin Van Buren— Ame- 
thyst and Victor streets. Van Nest. 

P. S. 35. Franz Sigel— 163 street, 
Grant and Morris avenues. 

P. S. 36, Unionport— Castle Hill, 
Blackrock and . Wat.=on avenues. 



P. S. 37. H. Parker Willis— 145th street 
and Willis avenue. 

P. S. 38. Lindl«c Murray— 157th street 
and Brook avenue. 
I P. S. 39, The Longwood — Longwood 
avenue. Kelly and Beck streets. 

P. S. 40, The Ritterhouse— Prospect 
avenue and Ritter place. 

P. S. 42. The Wendover — Washington 
and Wendover avenues. 
P. S. 43. Cecil Calvert— 135th street 
and Brown place. 
I P. S. 44, The David G. Farragut— 
, 176th street and Prospect avenue. 
I P. S. 45, The Paul Hoffman— lS9th 
I and Hoffman streets. 
I P. S. 46, Edgar Allen Poe— 19Cth street 
I and Briggs avenue. 

p. S. 47— John P^andolph— Randolph 
and St. Lawrence avenues. 

P. S. 49, The Riverside— 261st street. 
Riverside. 

P. S. 50, The Clara Barton — 172d street 
and Vyse avenue. 

P. S. 51, James K. Paulding— 158th 
street and Jackson avenue. 

P. S. 50, Cieneral William S. Rose- 

erans — Kelly st., neai- Avenue St. John. 

P. S. 53, The Michael Faraday— 168th 

street and Teller avenue. 

P. S. 54, The Intervale — Intervale av- 

j enue, Freeman and Chisholni streets. 

P. S. 55, The Caleb Gushing- St. 
i Paul's place and Washington avenue. 



10 



PROPOSED NAMES for ilie PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS OF N. Y. C. 

, . a- 



PROPOSED NAMES FOR RICHMOND SCHOOLS 



p. S. 1, The TottenviUe— Academy 
place, TottenviUe. 

P. S. 2, The ftichmond Valley— Wie- 
ner street, Richmond Valley, Princes 
Bay Postoffice. 

I'. S. 3, The William Bradford (the 
first, printer in New YnrU)— School 
street, Princes Bay. 

P. .S. 4, The Kreischer— Fre.sh Kill 
road, Krelscherville. 

P. S. 5, The Huguenot Park— Amboy 
road. Huguenot. 

P. S. 6. The (Betsy) Ross— P>ossville 
avenue, Rossville. 

P. S. T, The Greenridge— Fresh Ivill 
road. Green Ridge. 

P. S. 8, The Great Kills— Lindenwood 
avenue. Great Kills. 

P. S. :<, The New Dorp— Knight ave- 
nue. New Dorp. 

P. S. 10, The Egbert— Richmond road, 
New Dorp. 

P. S. 11, The Thomas Dong-an— Jef- 
ferson street, Dong-an Hills. 



P. S. 1-', The (Baioui Steuljen- .Steu- 
ben street, Stapleton. 

P. S. 13. The Rosebank— Pennsylva- 
nia avenue, Rosebank. 

P. S. 14, The Edmund Clarence Sted- 
nian— Broad and Brook streets, Sta- 
pleton. 

P. S. 15, The Daniel D. Tompkins- 
Grant street, Tompkinsville. 

P. S. 16, The Henry W. Slocum— Mad- 
ison street, Tompkinsville. 

P. S. IT. The Bay View— Prospect av- 
enue. New Brighton. 

P. S. 18. The New Brighton— Broad- 
wa> , West New Brighton. 

P. S. IS. .John Greenleaf Whittier— 
Greenleaf avenue. West New Brighton. 

P. S. 20, The Herberton or Port Rich- 
mond— Herbert on avenue. Poll Rich- 
mond. 

P. S. 21. The Yale — Sherman street, 
Port Richmond. 

P. S. 22, The Granite— Richmond ave- 
nue, Graniteville, Port P.ichmond Post- 
offlca, Bik,. 



I I". S. 23. Mariner's Harbor — Andros 
I avijuue. Mariner Harbor. 

P. S. 24, Thomas Sumpter— Washing- 
ton avenue, Summer\'illp. Postoffice 
Port Richmond, Rural Free Delivery. 

P. S. 25. The Bloomfleld— Chelsea 
road, Bloomfleld. 

P. .S. 2«, The Carteret— Richmond 
turnpike, Linoleumville. 

P. S. 27, The Richard H. .Stoddard- 
Richmond avenue. New Spring-ville. 

P. S. 28. The Richmond— Centre 
street, Richmond. 

P. S. 23, The John B. Gough— Manor 
road. West New Brighton. 

P. S. No. 30, The John Fiske— Fiske 
avenue. West New Brighton. 

P. S. 31, The James Bogardus— Pleas- 
ant avenue, Bogardus Corners. 

1'. S. 32, The Erastus Wiraan— Os- 
good avenue, Stapleton. 

P. S. 33, The Grantland— Washington 
avenue. Grant City. 

P. S. 34, The Fort Wadsworth— Fin- 
gerboard road, Rosebank. 



ALPHABETICAL INDEX OF PROPOSED NAMES 



The foUowin" al|>habeiical index of thfi proposed names for schools is siibnmied wuli the names, so that Miose 
who may desire to change any of the names proposed tor the respective schools, can determine whether the name 
WhicH they would prefer is given to a school elsewhere. 

The letters after the numbers represent the boroughs in which the schools aie located: B, Brooklyn: Q, 
Queens; M, Manhattan; Bx, Bion-v: R. Richmond. 



Adams, John Quincy (1 B). 
Adelphi (12 B). 
Agassiz (82 M). 
Allen, Ethan (144 M). 
Ampere (64 Q). 
Anthony, Susan B. (94 M). 
Aguilar. Grace (60 M). 
Arkwright (61 B). 
Arlington (108 B). 
Arthur, Chester A. (66 M). 
Astor (67 M). 
Astoria (7 Q). 
Audubon (46 M). 

B 

Bacon, Roger (177 M). 
Balnbridge (137 B). 
Baisley Park (45 Q). 
Bancroft (57 M). 
Barren Island (120 B). 
Barry, Commodore (37 M). 
Bartlett (168 B). 
Barton. Ciara (50 Bx). 
Bath Beach (163 B). 
Bayard, Nicholas (23 M) 
Bay Ridge (102 B). 
Bayside (31 Q). 
Say View (18 B). 



Beaumont (32 Bx). '% 

Bedford (93 B). 
Bedford Park (8 Bx). 
Bell. Alexander (1TC 1!) 
Belmont (64 B). 
Relvidere (24 B). 
Benson, Egbert (97 B). 
Bcnsoiihursi (I2S I!). 
Bergen (2 B). 
Rprk.-?lfy (4 B) 
Blackstone (74 M), 
BlissvUle (80 Q). 
Bloomfleld j(2.i R). 
Blythebonrke (105 B). 
Bogardus, James (31 R). 
Bonheur (126 Ml. 
Boone (46 Q). 
Borough Park (103 B). 
Bowne (21 Q). 
Bradford, William (3 1!). 
j'rei'.ton (49 Q). 
Bridgeman. I.,aura (166 M). 
Brooklyn Model (138 B). 
Brownsville (156 B). 
Brownson, Orestes A. (91 B). 
Bryant, William Cullen (40 M). 
Buckley, John W. (158 B). 
Burke. Edmund (29 Bx). 
Burnside, A. E. (26 Bx). 
Butler, William A. (133 B). 



Calvert (43 Bx). 
Cambridge (68 Q). 
Canarsie (115 B). 
Carlisle (26 M). 
Carroll, Charles (33 Q). 
Carteret (26 R). 
Cartier (102 M). 
cnry, Phoebe (10 Q). . 
Century (109 M). 
Champlain (178 B). 
• hatham Square (1 M). 
Chauncey, I. (113 B). 
Chelsea (33 M). 
Cherry Hill (114 M). 
I'hester Park (62 Q). 
I'hristopher (150 B). 
<"ity Island (17 Bx). 
Clarke, Freeman (179 B) 
Claremont Park (28 Bx) 
I'larkson (95 M). 
Clay, Henry (79 M). 
Clemens. S. L (98 M). 
Cleveland (36 B). 
Colgate, J. B. (12 Q). 
College Point (27 Q). 
Colonial Park (169 M) 
Columbia (29 B). 
Columbus (141 M). 
Concr'rd (14 B>. 



PROPOSED NAMES for the PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS OF N. Y. C. 



11 



Coney Island (100 B). 

Conselyea (133 B). 

Cooper. Fenimore (18-4 M). 

Cooper, Peter (122 M). 

Cornell (71 Q). 

Corona (IG Q). 

Cortelyou (139 B). 

Courtlandt (3 Bx). 

Cowper, William (73 Q). 

Crawford, F. Marion (47 HV 

Creedmoor (33 Q). 

Croclieron (41 Q). 

Crotonia (4 Bx). 

Cunningham, Christopher (124 15). 

Cu^5hiug:, C. (55 Bx). 



I Dana, Richard H. (125 B). 

1 Dante (117 M). 

[ Darwin (4 Q). 

t Davy (S5 Q). 

I Dean (41 B). 

. Dearborn (127 M). 

i Decatur, LStepheu (35 B). 

1 Degraw (58 B). 

I DeKalb (45 B). 

Delancey (ICl M). 
' DeSoto (130 M). 
; Dewey (136 B). 

Dix, J. A. (8 Q). 

Dongan, Thomas (11 R). 

Doty, John (21 M). 

Douglastown (98 Q). 
' Drake. Joseph Rodman (28 B). 

Draper. Andrew S. (101 M). 

Dumont (109B B). 

Dunkly (16 B). 

Dunton (.50 Q). 

Dupont. Samuel F. (31 B). 

Dv.iyht T. (33 Bx). 

11 • I'ark (112 B). 



K.- ■,.. .-mI (05 Q). 
Kilgf'combe (5 M). 
Kgbert (10 R). 
Eg-gleston (147. B). 
Kllery (52 B). 
Klliott (67 B). 
pnisworth (159 M). 
Klmhurst (89 Q). 
Kmerson. R. W. (61 M). 
F-ramet, Robert (38 B). 
Ericsson (136 B). 
Kuclid (93 Q). 
Evergreen (To B). 



Fairvlew (14 Q). 
Faraday (55 Bx). 
Farragut, D. O. (44 Bx). 
Far Roekaway (39 Q). 
Field, Cyrus (187 M). 
Field, Eugene (39 B). 
Field, Thomas "W. (56 B). 
Fiske. John (30 R). 

Flatbush (90 B). 

Fletcher (30 Q). 

Fordham (5 Bx). 

Forest Hills (3 Q). 

Forest Park (97 Q). 

Forsyth (20 M). 

Fort Hamilton (104 B). 

Fort Washington (115 M) 

Fox, Charles J. (20 Bx). 

Franklin (96 M). 

Fulton (2 Bx). 

Fulton, Robert (8B). 



M) 



{\'X2 M). 



Galileo (121 M). 

Gallagher, .John (69 B). 

Gallaudet (47 M). 

Galvani (83 M). 

Gansevoort (56 M). 

Garfield (78 Q). 

Garrison, William L (31 Bx) 

Gates, General (129 B). 

Gaynor, William .T. (131 B). 

George, Henry (140 M). 

Gerry, E. T. (103 M). 

Gilmore, P. Sarsfiekl (44 Q). 

Glendale (67 Q). 

Glendale, new (91 Q). 

Glenraore (84 B). 

Glenwood Road (102 B). 

Goldsmith (10 Bx). 

Gough, John B. (.58 B). 

Gouvernpur (147 M). 

Gowanus (94 B). 

Grace, William R. (68 M). 

Graham (49 B). 

Gramercy Park (50 M). 

Granite (22 R). 

Grant, U. S. (93 If). 

Grantland (33 R) 

Gravesend (95 li,. 

Great Kills (8 R). 

Greeley, Horace (59 B). 

Green, Alexander H. (9 

Greenpoint (22 B). 

Greendridge (7 R). 

Greenwich (41 M). 

Greenwood (60 B). 

(iiigsi-alioiniur, Itandnlpl 

H 

Hale, Kduanl Everett (Su B). 
Hale, Nathan (80 M). 
Hallpck (86 Q). 
Halletfs Cove (9 Q). 
Hamilton, Alexander (186 M). 
Hamlin (131 M). 
Hammond (82 Q1. 
Hancock, John (3 B). 
Harlem (39 M). 
Harris, W. T. (11 M)- 
Harrison (122 B). 
Harvard (34 Q). 
j Harvey (110 M). 
Hawthorne (51 B). 
Heyward, Thomas .Ir. (33 B). 
I Heberton (20 R). 
I Henry, Patrick (2 M). 

Herkimer (155 B). 
j Hess, William C. (19 M). 
', Hewes (21 Bx). 

Hewitt, A. S. (48 M). 
Higgins, Algernon (111 B). 
Hinsdale (63 B). 
Hoffman (45 Bx). 
Hollis*(35 Q). 

Holmes, Oliver Wendell ("7 M). 
Homecrest (153 B). 
i Hooper, F. W. (165 B). 
Hopkins (148 B). 
Hopkinson (175 B). 
Houston (13 M). 
Howard, O. O. (92 Q). 
Howe, Ellas (51 M). 
Howe, Julia Ward (116 B). 
Howland (171 M). 
Hoyt (32 B). 
Hudson, Henry (3 M). 
Huguenot (5 R). 
Humboldt, Alexander (23 B). 
Hunterfly (121 B). 



Hunter's Point (1 Q). 

Huntington (40 Q). 
Huxley (70 M). 



Intervale (54 Bx). 
Inwood (52 M). 
Irving Park (151 B). 
Ir\ington (86 B), 



Jackson, General (160 B). 
Jefferson, Thomas (78 AU- 
Jesup '23 Q). 
Jewell-Ditmas (76 B). 
Jones, Paul (107 M). 

K 

Kearny, Phil (25 Bx). 
Kerable, Frances (109G B). 
Kent, .Tames (157 B). 
Kepler, Johann (124 M). 
Kiddle (87 M). 
Kingsbridge (7 Bx). 
King (8 M). 
Kip's Bay (49 M). 
Knox. General (18 M). 
Kosciusko (68 B). 
Kouwenhovcn (98 B). 
Kreischer (4 R). 



Lafayette, Gen. ('25 B). 
Lake (19 Q). 
Lakeville (32 Q). 
Lancaster (7 M). 
Larcom, Lvtcy (141 B). 
La Salle (17 M). 
Laurel Hill (76 Q). 
Lawrence, James (5 B). 
Lee, Henry (85 M). 
Lefferts (170 B). 
Lenox (89 M). 
Lewis (188 M). 

Lexington (76 M). 

Liljerty (173 B). 

Lincoln, Abraham (171 B). 

Lincoln Park (144 B). 

Linden Hill (74 Q). 

Little, J. J. (2 Bx). 

Livingston (121 B). 

Longwood (39 Bx). 

Lott, John (165 B). 

Lowell (119 M). 

Louona (15 Q). 

Mc 

McClellan, Gen. George B. (120 M). 
McCormack, Cyrus (100 M). 
McDonough (70 B). 
McGowan, P. F. (31 M). 
McKibbin (21 B). 
McKinley, William (63 M). 
McLoughlin Park (5 B). 
McNamee, John (87 B). 

M 

Madison (165 M). 

Malone, Sylvester (50 B). 

Manhattanville (43 M). 

Mann (90 Q). 

Mapleton (48 B). 

Maroy, William L. (58 M). 
i Mariner's Harbor (23 R). 
' Marlon (106 M). 
I Martense (17 Q). 
I Maujer (18 B). 

Maxwell, Henry W. (65 B). 



12 



I'ROPOSED NAMES for ilie PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS OF N. Y. C. 



M'VJ-de, General Ceorge O. (105 M). 
J^"afhBr, Thos. .1'". (17 B). ' 
J-^-.r-vin, A. G. (74 ]i). 
>-r..<!B.r.jle (12S P.). 
IV'^WIetown (51 Q). 
iv"'.frii6 Village (87 Q). 
i'''-Hvood (99 15). 
TV-;.,,, It, Pfiter (i:{4 M). 

T >. (M M). 

>■• S( lionl Miml)att:in (SI Jl). 

3>'- ■ ,15 M). 

>' '::imiery (KJS M1, 

]Vi,„-,-.._ Thomas (174 M). 

JLiV-jvania (9 i'\). 

Morrison, Willinm .T. (73 15). 

Mnr-is Park (57 (Q). 

Mnrsf*, S. F.'B. (72 ]\-). 

j.tnr*on (55 Q). 

Mn.'"t. Mo'-ris (24 M). 

Mo^'tor (110 B). 

Mi'«ii«r, Max (75 O). 

Wiirray Hill (27 At). 

Murray I.iudlay (SS Kx). 

N 

Nfilson, Thos. :'r. (27 B). 

Ne.lherlnnds (11*J B). , 

Now Brighton (18 B). 

New Dorc (9 R). 

New Lots (72 B). 

Newton, Isaac (S3 B). 

Nftwton, Gen. John (28 M). 

Nfiwtown (9.S B). 

New ■^■'♦reoht (°ither 101 or ICI! B). 

Nightbigale, Florence (0 M). 

Norfolk (75 M). 



O'Brien, Miles (151 M). 
Ocean Hill (73 B). 
Ogden (11 Bx). 
Olney (14 M). 
O'Neill, Henry (64 M). 
Otis, James ()72 M). 
Oxford (C6 Q). 
Ozanam (96 Q). 



Parker, F. W. (18 Bx>. 
Parkman, Frances (48 B). 
P.arkside (130 B). 
Parkville (134 B). 
Parkway (167 B). 
Pascal (65 Q). 
Patterson, Calvin (13 B). 
Paulding, James K (51 Bx). 
Payne, John Howard (10 B). 
Peabody (59 M). 
Penn, William (77 B). 
Perry, Oliver H. (34 B). 
Phillips, Wendell (35 M). 
Pinckney, Charles C. (54 M). 
Pitt, William (4 M). 
Pitkin (159 B). 
Poe, Edgar Allen (46 Bx). 
Polk, James K. (108 M). 
Poppenhusen (29 Q). 
Prescott, W. H. (170 M). 
Prcotor (146 B). 
Prospect Hill (9 B). 
Pulitzer, Joseph (34 M). 
Purroy, Salome (53 M). 
Putnam, Israel (44 B). 



Q 

Qulncy, Joslah (26 B), 



Kandall, S. S. (1 Bx). 

Randoljih, John (47 Bx). 

Ravenswood (S3 Q). 

Kaymond (161 J.?). 

Beid. Whitelaw (57 B). 

Bemsen (114 B). 

Revere, Paul (190 M). 

Richmond (28 ];). 

Richmond Valley (2 R). 

]{ichter. Jean Paul (SI Q). 

Ridgewood (177 Q). 

Hiis, Jacob A. (56 Q).. 

Rittenhouse (40 Bx).' 

Itiverdale,' The (49 Bx). 

Riverside (90 M). 

Rivington (SS M). 

Itobertson (25 Q). 

l-lohinson (24 Q). 

Rodney (164 B). 

Rocknway, Far (39 Q). 

Rockaway Park (.43 Q). 

Roeland.sen (29 M). 

Rogers. Henry Darwin (92 B). 

I-Joosevelt (112 M). 

Rosebank (13 R). 

Ro.secrans, General William S. (52 Bx). 

liosedale (.38 Q). 

Ross, The Betsy (6 R). 

Rossini (40 B). 

Rngby (135 B). 

Rutledge. Fdward (71 B). 

Itycrsc.n (69 B). 



i ' Admiral (160 B). 
S^itiri.nl (20 Q). 
Schermerhorn (15 B). 
Schiller (25 M). 
Schurz, Carl (77 M). 
.Scott. Winfield (140 B). 
.Sea Gate (SO B). 
Seneca (88 Q). 

Seward. William H. (62 M). 
Shepard, Edward M. (62 B). 
Sheridan. General (16 Bx). 
Sherman. William (54 Q). 
Sigel, Franz (35 Bx). 
Slocnm, Henry W. (10 R). 
Snedeker (60 Q). 
Southgate (177 B). 
South. Old (63 Q). 
.Springfield (37 Q). 
St. Albans (36 Q). 
St. Elmo (61 Q). 
St. John's Park (44 M). 
St. Mark's (42 B). 
St. JVlary's Park (27 Bx). 
St. Nicholas (10 M). 
Stanley (116 M). 
Stanton (22 M). 
Stedman, Edmun." C. (14 Ri 
Stoinway (84 Q). 
Stephenson, George (135 M). 
Steuben, Baron (12 R). 
Stevenson, R. L. (183 M). 
Stevens. Alexander H. (72 Q). 
Stewart, Seth T. (78 B). 
Stockton (55 B). 
Stoddard, Robert H. (27 R). 
Stowe, Harriet B. (82 B). 
Stranahan (142 B). 
Sullivan, James E. (160 M). 
Sumner (65 M). 
Sumpter, Thomas (24 R). 
Sunnyside (2 Q). 
Sunset Park (169 B). 
Suj dam (123 B). 



Tallmau (22 Q). 
Taylor, Bayard (158 M). 
Ten Eyck (117 B). 
Tesla, Nikola (157 M). 
Thiry. John H. (6 Q). ' 
Thoreau (22 Q). ' 

Throgg's Neck (14 Bx).- 
Tilden, S. J. (130 B). 
Tompkins, Daniel D, (15 R). 
Tompkins Square (36 M). 
To.scanelli (53 B). 
Tottenville (1 R). 



u 



Uniouville (81 B). 



Vandervoort (SS B). 

Van Brunt (127 B). 

Van Buren, Martin (34 Bx). 

Vanderveer Park (89 B). 

Van Dyke (5 Q). 

Van Gelder (42 M). 

Van Rensselaer (71 M). 

Vernam (42 Q). 

Volt.a, Alessaudro (.IS M). 

w 

\\a is\v..r(h (132 M). 
Wadsworth, Fort (34 R). 
Walker (18 Q). 
Wallace, General Lew (6C B). 
Walton, The (30 Bx). 
Walworth (54 B). 
Ward, Edward G. (19 B). 
Warner, Charles D. (118 B). 
Warren (6 B). 
Warwick (158 B). 
Washington, Fort (115 M). 
Wa.shington, George (11 B). 
Washington, Martha (150 M). 
^Valt, James (69 M). 
Webster, Daniel (179 M) . 
Weir, James (172 B). 
West End (9 M). 
West Farms (6 Bt). 
AVestchester (12 Bx). 
Westmoreland (94 Q). 
Whitman, Walt (43 B). 
Whitney. Evangeline (79 B). 
Whittier, John Greenleaf (19 R1. 
Willnrd. Emma (43 M). 
Williamsbridge (13 Bx). 
Williamsburg (37 B). 
\\'illiams, Wdliaai (174 B). 
Willis, N. Parker (37 Bx). 
WiUoughby (162 B). 
Wiman. Erastus (i2 R). 
Windsor Terrace (154 B). 
Winthrop, John (73 M). 
Wolcott (30 B). 
Wood, William (32 M). 
Woodlawn (19 Bx). 
WoodhuU (35 Q). 
Woodside (11 Q). 
Woodworth, Samuel (100 B1. 
Woolsey, Theodore D. (107 B). 
Wright, Silas (104 M). 



Y 



Yale (21 R). 
Yorktown (7 B). 
Yorkville (30 M). 



Zabriskie (16 M). 



PROPOSED NAMES for the PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS OF N. Y. C. 



13 




Mrs. TYLER-MILLER 

Importer and Manufacturer of Fine Hair Goods 
80 and 82 FLEET STREET, BROOKLYN 

Newark Branch — 707 Broad St. — Holt Building. 

Shampooing^MaiiieiiriiigJairDressmg 
Scalp aid Facial Massage 

LARGEST LINE OF HAIR GOODS IN THE CITY— LOWEST PRICES 

Private Room for Each Patron 

For gray, bleached or faded hair I 
recommend and use in my establishment 
Empress Improved Hair Stain— does not 

rub off or stain the scalp, leaves the hair 
soft and glossy, so that it can be curled 
or waved beautifully. Guaranteed abso- 
lutely harmless by the leading derma- 
tologists of the Universities of Berlin 
and Leipsic, Germany, and Paris, France. 

MrsTYLER-MILLER 

80-82 Fleet St., Brooklyn 

Opp. Loegers and Sew Dime Savings Bank 
TeL Main 1319 



'/tZTT^ 




% 



P//<<^^x^/'/'/^y./^/W/V/w>>/'>.^>^^^^ 



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-^ 



When you want a special treat without 
paying an extravagant price for it, take 
home a box of 

WALLACE'S 

CHOCOLATES 

You will instantly appreciate their su- 
periority over other kinds. 

"Candies of Character" 
, They sweeten life. 

Sold in boxes at 

60c., 80c., $1.00 the Box 

Your local dealer should have them. 
Ask for and insist upon getting. 

WALLACE'S 

OF 

NEW YORK 

Made for the fine retail trade and a 

discriminating public. 

Washington and Park Aves., Brooklyn, N. Y. 



The 

rooklyn Eagle 
Information 
Bureau 



is well supplied with tHe fullest 
details regarding Schools and 
Summer Resorts. No charge. 
The Bureau is always at youi) 



Ul 



service. 



'*isa 



J 



y 



14 



PROPOSED NAMES for the PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS OF N. Y. C. 




t^^ 



t*"^^^ 



Be a Lifter 
Not a Leaner! 



Spend some hours each week getting capital 
in your head where nobody can steal it from you. 
Read good books like The Brooklyn Daily Eagle 
Almanac and all The Eagle Libraries as they ap- 
pear each month. 

Get a good insight into everything worth 
knowing at a cost of only $1.50 a year for a 
year's subscription to all the libraries, including 
the high-class and very instructive Eagle Almanac. 

Be a lifter, not a leaner. People will soon 
see that you have a good head on your shoulders 
and they will seek your opinion about different 
happenings; your family will look to you for the 
good, sensible advice you will be able to give, and 
your neighbors, your employer and acquaintances 
will all respect you. 

Try a year's subscription to The Eagle 
Library. 



^ 



•5^1^ 



PROPOSED NAMES for the PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS OF N. Y. C. 



15 



PaIins,Vines and Fresh Flowers 

Supplied and Artistically Arranged for Weddings at ReasonaUe Ratea 



FLORAL 

DECORATIONS 

FOR 

ALL 

OCCASIONS 




PLANTS 

AMO 

PLOWBRS 

DBLIVBRBD 

ANYWMBRB 



Thirty^ five Green houses 

HORTICULTURIST 

734 Fifth Avenue 

Branches: Fort Hamilton Parkway, 

TELEPH5!5es 27 South— 3410 Flatbush. Gravesend Av., aid 291-318 24th St. 

PLOTS IN GREENWOOD CEMETERY IMPROVED AND CARED FOB. 




BEOOHLYM EAttl 




A NEW PUBLICATION NOW READY 



This book will give you complete information about Winter and 
Health Resorts both North and South. The distance from New York, 
the fare, the temperature, names of all the hotels, cost of board and 
the hundred and one details which you want to know are all given in 
this compact book. 

IT IS FREE 



Call at The Eagle Information Bureau or any Eagle Branch Office 
for a copy, or send by mail. 



16 



PROPOSED NAMES for tlie PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS OF N. Y. C. 



GRAVEL ROOFING A SPECIALTY 




Steel Portable Buildings Fireproof Garages 

' MANUFACTURED IN BROOKLYN 

WILLIAM BUCHANAN 

488-490-490 y2 Sumner Avenue 1587 Fulton Street, Brooklyn | 



fr 



THE DAVIS & WEISS 

SPECIAL Hfi ^f^^O 
SUIT OR TOPCOAT 

Cannot be Duplicated $OK 
Elsewhere for ^^ 

OPPOSITE BOROUGH HALL 

361 FULTON STREET 



r\ 



BRANCH STORES : 



Ca. 



BROADWAY at Gates Ave. 80 WALL ST., N. Y. ] 



Six Cooking Lessons Free 



Daily From 2 to 4 P. M., Except Saturday, 10:30 A. M. 



Under the careful direction of our expert Domestic 
Science Instructors, housewives and prospective house- 
wives will be taught gratis. 

The knack of wasteless buying. 

The proper preparation of foods. 

The relative nutritive value of foods. 

The economical operation of the gas range, and its 
possibilities for oven cooking. 

The making of "left overs" into dainty, attractive, 
palatable dishes, and 

That proper cooking is economical cooking and 
benefits the purse as well as the health. 

Teachers and upper class students interested in 
Domestic Science are cordially invited to visit our building 
any week day between 8 A. M. and 5 P. M., or 

A special demonstration will be given in our spacious 
classroom for the benefit of the scholars upon written 
request of the teacher. 

The building is located just a half block from Borough 
Hall at 

180 REMSEN ST. 

The Brooklyn Union Gas Co. 



LIBRftRY OF CONGRESS 

I 11 111 II! II I HI Ihllllll 



022 118 181 5<| 



Absolutely Fireproof 




T 



O secure the best care, telephone our Estimate Department, 5560 
Main, for tne storage or your nouseliola goods ana valuaoles. 
Expert packers. Carpets cleaned by electric or vacuum macninery 

The Eagle Warehouse and Storage Co. f.j'el^/'i",' ^Ir.fZ^V. 

OFFICERS and DIRECTORS of the EAQLE WAREHOUSE AND STORAGE COMPANY 

OFFICERS 

JOHN H. HAU,OCK, J>resident JOHN E. CASSIDY, Vice-President & Mgr. 



Andkew D. Baird 
JfoBN E. Cassidy 
Daniel J. Cxekm 



HERBERT F. GUNNISON, Secretary and Treasurer 
DIRECTORS 
JuuAN D. Fairchild T. M. Lloyd 

Herbert F. Gunnison Wm. M. Van Andbn 



William Hester 



£. Le Grand Beers 



P. J. Casun 
J. H. Hallqcx 
W. V. Hbst«« 



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